In 1968 plaintiff and defendant owned equal interests in a Scott County farm. After parting company, plaintiff sued defendant (so the 1969 petition alleged) for half “of the reasonable value of Plaintiff’s [1968] services” in leveling part of the land, which task plaintiff assumed “at the express request of Defendant with the understanding this Defendant would pay one-half of the reasonable value of Plaintiff’s services, equipment, time and labor.” 1 Defendant answered there was no such agreement, but even so, the parties had compromised and settled all their differences in a written February 1969 contract and plaintiff had waived or was es-topped to assert his rights, if any, by delaying the leveling issue until after the settlement. Sans a jury, the court nisi determined that plaintiff performed the leveling "by reason of arrangement with the defendant ... to the benefit of the defendant [that] resulted in the improvement of the landalso, that “defendant paid the plaintiff [$300] for a portion of the work,” and that the “fair and reasonable amount due the plaintiff for his services was $1,668.91 . . . leaving a balance due the plaintiff of $1,368.91.” Judgment was *118 entered accordingly and defendant appealed.
Albeit our duty in court-tried cases to review the case both upon the law and the evidence [Rule 73.01(d), V.A.M. R.], that duty is restricted to reviewing only those specific matters properly urged by the appellant. Del Monte Corp. v. Stark & Son Wholesale, Inc.,
But enough of battologizing— what does defendant claim? He says the trial court erroneously found for plaintiff because “there was no express or implied contract” and plaintiff “waived his claim for land leveling by not formally including the claim in the written agreement and by subsequent acts.”
2
We properly may not classify such utterances other than mere abstractions which short the commandments of Rule 84.04(d). Harbaugh v. Harbaugh,
Depending on whether plaintiff’s or defendant’s recountings are accepted (for they were the only two present at any per *119 tinent time), a land leveling agreement as averred, supra, either existed or it did not. Plaintiff insisted that in the Spring of 1968 after defendant acquired an interest in the farm, they several times discussed leveling part of the land and, although in the initial stages the particulars as to cost, et cetera, were unknown, “[w]e agreed to level it.” Through plaintiff’s arrangements, two tracts were surveyed by the Soil Conservation Service — only one survey was eventually used. The surveys “show you the whole design for grading . and balancing your dirt and how much is to be moved to accomplish this design and what your grade will be after it is finished.” Subsequent to obtaining the surveys, plaintiff tried to contact defendant without success but decided, nevertheless, “to go ahead and start and I contacted him . that night on the phone and told him what I was doing.” A day or two after the leveling was underway, defendant met plaintiff in the farm field where the work was being done. Plaintiff’s version is that they “went over the figure, the design [survey], the yardage and the price” and defendant said “he would pay one-half of this fee that we agreed on, eighteen cents a yard on eighteen thousand five hundred and forty yards plus planing and correction work.” Plaintiff also related that he “offered to go until July without payment provided he could help me out with some of the expenses . . . and he gave me a check for three hundred dollars right there in the field and said that he would contact his brother about getting a culvert . . . so we could drain our tail water out into a drainage ditch.” To the contrary, defendant asseverated he advised plaintiff he was “not interested in leveling the farm,” that he had not seen the cut sheet (survey) until it was produced in court on the day of trial, and that when he gave defendant his $300 check it was accompanied by the admonition that “if you go any further you are on your own because I don’t intend to spend no money on this. Leveling is just not practical and it is going to cost too much money.”
Indeed, as defendant reminds us, a contract consists of an offer and an acceptance, or, in other words, a meeting of the minds. Helmkamp v. American Family Mutual Insurance Co.,
Defendant’s second point, we assume, relates to the February 1969 written agreement “signed by the parties.” This writing (an exhibit in the cause) dealt specifically with four enumerated
*120
matters, i.e., (1) defendant’s payment of principal and interest on a note secured by a deed of trust to the farm, (2) plaintiff’s obligation on a note secured by a second deed of trust, (3) defendant’s indebtedness to plaintiff for fertilizer and chemicals, and (4) defendant’s payment of real estate taxes. The agreement specified how these specific matters would be adjusted through a sale of the farm and otherwise. Nothing of defendant’s obligation to plaintiff on the land leveling “arrangement” was contained in the agreement. Plaintiff testified that he “mentioned” the land leveling indebtedness of defendant at the time the agreement was executed and that he would not have signed the agreement had it purported to settle that account. Plaintiff also denied, as defendant later testified, that he had ever suggested that we “just forget all about” the land leveling. The argument portion of defendant’s brief apropos the second point tracks along the path that a settlement which recites it is in full satisfaction of all claims and demands between the parties as to all related prior disputes between them also includes claims not specifically mentioned where it appears that the parties intended to embrace all matters of difference between themselves. ISA C. J.S. Compromise & Settlement § 27, at pp. 238-239. We cannot dispute this generality although we can say it is not germane here because nowhere in the agreement is it recited that the writing is in full settlement of all the disputes or accounts of the parties. In construing and deciding the effects of a valid settlement and compromise, the court’s primary aim is to effect the intention of the parties (15 Am.Jur.2d Compromise and Settlement § 20, at p. 954), and a compromise settlement or agreement is conclusive as to only those matters which the parties have intended to include within its terms. Meyers v. Meyers,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Whether plaintiff declares on an express contract or upon quantum meruit need
not
be decided. When the nature of the declaration cannot be determined with definiteness, a plaintiff will be permitted to recover upon whichever of the two the-oríes his evidence warrants. Johnson v. Estate of Girvin,
. To the first point, defendant refers us to Appeal & Error <@=>1008(2) in 3A Missouri Digest; 32 Missouri Digest, Words and Phrases; and to 17 C.J.S. Contracts §§ 3 and 39. To the second point, defendant directs us to 15A C.J.S. Compromise & Settlement § 27 and to footnote 42 on page 343 of 12 Corpus Juris, which alludes to Lowe v. Marlow,
